rAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN, AILY TiliRSIMY , ', A 'r~1I2, 1942 .Cm A . ' aaa L.6s 'Tough T ommy' S peaks: Effett Of Jap Air Superiority Told By Admiral Thomias Hart ASSOCIATED D # POT URE PRESS NVEVWS By JOHN M. HIGHTOWERI WASHINGTON, March 11.-(/P)- Smashing Japanese aerial superior- ity that showed up at every crucial phase of battle was credited by Ad- miral Thomas C. Hart today with having produced victory for the en- emy in the first great campaign of the Pacific war. The former Asiatic Fleet Chief and Commander of Allied Naval Forces in the Western Pacific declared, how- ever, that the enemy had paid such a high cost in ship losses for the vast, rich territory captured that he must have "great concern" for the future. Slight, grayish "tough Tommy Hart" told his story of the tragic failure of the American, -Dutch and British Allies at -Secretary Knox's press conference. Beside him sat Admiral Ernest J. King, Supreme United States Naval Commander. The recital left no doubt among Hart's hearers that, in his view at least, America's first big task in re- conquering the Western Pacific must be to concentrate overwhelming air power there. By coincidence, emphasizing what air power can do, the War Depart- ment announced a short time after Hart had spoken out, that eight heavy American bombers had sunk two Japanese ships, set four on fire and beached another in a raid on the Harbor of Salamaua, New Gui- nea, a. Japanese-held port. The force which blasted these seven Jap ships was under command of Major Richard H. Carmichael, the Department's communique said, add- ing that 1 tons of bombs had dropped State Defense Corps Geared To'Emergency LANSING, March 11.-(P)-Michi- gan's civilian protection services soon will be geared to emergency tempo, Capt. Donald S. Leonard, State Com- mander of the Citizen Defense Corps, informed the State Defense Council today, Although air-raid warden organi- zation still is lacking in 17 of Michi- gan's 83 counties, Leonard disclosed 'that plans for a state-wide temporary alert system would be perfected this week. The system, he said, would be based upon coordination between the War Department, the state police and local police and sheriff depart- ments. Local police authorities are being notified by State Police Commissioner Oscar G. Olander that any Army warning of approaching enemy air- craft will be spread by means of the State Police communications system, via posts in each of the eight State Police districts. .. . ."It may sound complicated," Olander told the Council, "but it only entails eight or 10 message relays at each point of transmission." Once local authorities are con- tacted, Leonard said, hospitals, pub- lie utility sources and fire fighting departments could be notified to stand by for emergency service. If the warnings occur at night, blackouts will be ordered, Leonard said, adIing that although few prac- tice blackouts have been held in the state, it would be only a matter of "pulling a few switches" to achieve satisfactory blackouts. "The whole idea," the Commander declared, "is to give Michigan some air-raid precaution until our regu- lar protection service is completed." Elliott To Talk Here Saturday SRA To Sponsor Speech In RackhamBuilding Roland Elliott, ekecutive secretary of the National Council, Student Christian Associations, will speak on "Students in War Areas" at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in the Rackham Lec- ture Hall. Elliott's talk is the fourth in the series sponsored by the Student Re- ligious Association. He is in Ann Arbor in conjunction with the World Student Service Fund, which is rais- ing money to aid Chinese and Euro- peace war students, prisoners of war and refugees in this country. One of the principle figures in the Christian Student Movement, Elliott has just returned from a trip to Europe. Graduates To Hold Coffee flour Today Graduate students and faculty members are invited to attend the first of a series of weekly coffee hours snonsored by the Graduate Council i t .ittck, and "allou lan'; returned to their base undamaged." Previously Japan's ship losses by American action had been 138 vessels of all types. Hart, who was relieved of his com- mand because of ill health, has just returned to Washington, Knox gave over almost the entire press confer- ence to him. His statement was the first offi- cial exposition of Japan's Western Papific victories. It was a recital of almost constant defeats, but Hart, eyes flashing and head held high over his tall, old-fashioned stiff col- lar, told it with proud emphasis on the Asiatic Fleet's accomplishments against overwhelming odds. "The American Asiatic Fleet has been involved in the loss of a cam- paign," he said. "But the war con- tinues and much of that fleet, with what is now a veteran personnel, re- mains to assist in carrying it on." Dent Students Urged To Stay In University Dean Bunting Sees Future Shortage; Draft Boards Will Grant Deferment Students enrolled in the School of Dentistry are urged to remain in school because of an imminent short- age of dentists for both military and civilian work, Dean Russell W. Bunt- ing of the dental school declared yesterday. Although the dentists now in the Army Medical Reserve Corps have not all been taken, Dean Bunting as- serted, in time there will nct be enough to serve our rapidly increas- ing armed forces. Before the end of the war, he added, 10,000 or more dentists may be needed for military duty. Local draft boards have been in- structed by national headquarters to defer all dental students until grad- uation. None have been taken from the University, and there is no in- dication that any will be removed through selective service. Even before the war, Dean Bunt- ing commented, the demand for den- tists for civilian use alone was far greater than the number that could be supplied. The Navy has made provisions for dentists in its Vi program, in which Uoth pre-dental and dental students may enroll. According to the niunber of ap- plications coming in, the University dental school will probably have a capacity enrollment of freshmen next year, entering for the fall term. Daily Scoops Spring - Robin Gets The Bird! In this time of crisis, in this period of vast spending, in this era of bat- tling forces, the tides of Nature have taken a back seat, and the first robin, realizing that bustling Ann Arbor would ignore his annual arrival, perched out in frott of the Michigan Daily bIilding yesterday until some passig reporter would notice him. After repeated ruffling up of his feathers, our red-breasted hero was finally recognized, and .4o it is that we wish to give our friend the bird: The first robin of spring has arrived. health Campaign Starts LANSING, March 11. (P)- The state's campaign to immunize 750,000 children against smallpox and diph- theria started in Wayne County to- day, the state health department an- nounced. By May 1, the campaign is to be spread to the entire state as part of a program to prevent disease resulting from war-time population shifts or possible urban evacuations. "Theres o good C 0 U R S E-only "on the basis of Indian freedom" can the prob- lem of India, as it relates to svar support of Britain. be ap- proached, says Pandit Nehru (above), nationalist leader. B 0 M BS C 0 M 1 N C U P-A formidable B-17 bomber hov- ers in the background while a ground crew at a field In Hawaii cautiously lifts one of the bombs brought up on the trailer. The bomber is one of the planes on patrol in the llawaiian area. C U E F OR E A S T E R--Forerunner of Easter's fashion pa- rade is this simple but charming stole of black Alaska sealskin worn over a pearl gray wool gabardine suit. with mtching hat. The white corsage adds an interesting contrast. r1 B 0 0M ?-Sir Stafford Cripps (above), former British ambas- sador to Moscow, is. mentioned as a possible successor to Wins- ton Churchill--if and when the latter loses premiership. W A L K-DON ' T RUN-TO THE. NEAREST EX I T-Tom and.Jerry are the names of these glowering Bengal-tiger' cubs born at Fleischhacker zoo in San Francisco six months ago, but there regemblance to an alcobolic tipple ends. What dispositions! f " . .:. ..... .. ... 4;. 5_ { r ? . -. . , i